Il est là
"Il est là" (French pronunciation: [il ɛ la], He's There) was the second French entry in the Eurovision Song Contest 1956 (the only occasion on which contest rules allowed two entries per country), performed in French by Dany Dauberson.
Eurovision Song Contest 1956 entry | |
---|---|
Country | |
Artist(s) | |
Language | |
Composer(s) | Simone Vallauris |
Lyricist(s) | Simone Vallauris |
Conductor | |
Finals performance | |
Final result | 2nd |
Final points | - |
Entry chronology | |
◄ "Le temps perdu" (1956) | |
"La belle amour" (1957) ► |
The song was performed twelfth on the night (following Germany's Freddy Quinn with "So geht das jede Nacht" and preceding Luxembourg's Michèle Arnaud with "Les amants de minuit"). As the scoreboard for this Contest has never been made public, it is impossible to say how well the song did.
Lyrically, the song is in the chanson style popular at the early Contests, with Dauberson singing about the difficulties she has in trying to forget a former lover.
The song was accompanied at the 1956 contest by Mathé Altéry with "Le temps perdu" and was succeeded as French representative at the 1957 contest by Paule Desjardins with "La belle amour".
Sources and external links
- Official Eurovision Song Contest site, history by year, 1956
- Detailed info & lyrics, The Diggiloo Thrush, "Le temps perdu".